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Vintage-Views Antique Prints and Maps :: Antique Maps :: Africa :: Northwest Africa :: Elisee Reclus Geographical Maps of North West Africa :: GHADAMES, GADAMES, RHADAMES, Part of the Sahara ,Turkish vilayet of Tripoli.

GHADAMES, GADAMES, RHADAMES, Part of the Sahara ,Turkish vilayet of Tripoli.
GHADAMES, GADAMES, RHADAMES, Part of the Sahara ,Turkish vilayet of Tripoli.
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GHADAMES, GADAMES or RHADAMES, a town in an oasis of the same name, in that part of the Sahara which forms part of the Turkish vilayet of Tripoli. It is about 300 m. S.W. of the city of Tripoli and some 10 m. E. of the Algerian frontier. According to Gerhard RohIls, the last form given to the word most correctly represents the Arabic pronunciation, but the other forms aremore often used in Europe. The streets of the town are narrowand vaulted and have been likened to the bewildering galleriesof a coalpit. The roofs are laid out as gardens and preservedfor the exclusive use of the women. The Ghadamsi merchantshave been known for centuries as keen and adventurous traders, and their agents are to be found in the more important places of the western and central Sudan, such as Kano, Katsena, Kanem,Bornu, Timbuktu, as well as at Ghat and Tripoli. Ghadamesitself is the centre of a large number of caravan routes, and inthe early part of the i9th century about 30,000 laden camels entered its markets every year. The caravan trade was createdby the Ghadamsi merchants who, aided by their superior intelli-gence, capacity and honesty, long enjoyed a monopoly. In1873 Tripolitan merchants began to compete with them. In 1893 came the invasion ofBornuby Rabah,and thetotalstoppage of this caravan route for nearly ten years to the great detrimentof the merchants of Ghadames. The caravans from Kano werealso frequently pillaged by the Tuareg, so that the prosperityof the town declined. Later on, the opening of rapid means oftransport from Kano and other cities to the Gulf of Guinea alsoaffected Ghadames, which, however, maintains a considerabletrade. The chief articles brought by the caravans are ostrichfeathers, skins and ivory and one of the principal imports istea. In 1845 the population was estimated at 3000, of whom about 500 were slaves and strangers, and upwards of 1200 children; in 1905 it amounted in round numbers to 7000. The inhabitants are chiefly Berbers and Arabs. A Turkish garrisonis maintained in the town.Before the Christian era Ghadames was a stronghold of the Garamantes whose power was overthrown in the days of Augustus by L. Cornelius Balbus Minor,who captured Ghadames(Cydamus). It is not unlikely that Roman settlers may have been attracted to the spot by the presence of the warm springs which still rise in the heart of the town, and spread fertility in the surrounding gardens. In the 7th century Ghadames was conquered by the Arabs. It appears afterwards to have fallen under the power of the rulers of Tunisia, then to a native dynasty which reigned at Tripoli, and in the 16th century it became part of the Turkish vilayet of Tripoli. It has since then shared the political fortunes of that country. In the first half of the I9th century it was visited by several British explorers and later by German and French travellers.

Published for Elisee Reclus Universal Geography

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